A new European constitutional treaty would help
the EU work effectively, according to Neil Kinnock.

Speaking at a medical conference in Cardiff, the vice-president of the European Commission described the addition of 10 countries to the European Union on 1 May as "profound".

Mr Kinnock said that a treaty - likely to be agreed by member governments in June - would provide a modest but effective way for the enlarged EU to operate.

Speaking in the week that Tony Blair announced a government U-turn on holding a referendum on the EU constitution, Mr Kinnock also said the treaty would not lead to a United States of Europe.

The use of the euro, he added, would continue to be a
matter for individual member states to decide.

"Clearly, it would be absurd to depict the European Union as the best attainable system and incapable of
improvement, particularly when it is about to embark upon its largest ever
enlargement, from 15 to 25 member states," he said.

People have been wilfully misled and the interests and influence of the UK have consequently been
arrested

Neil Kinnock

"Such change is obviously profound and, equally obviously, it justifies
reforms in the system of the union."

The treaty would pull together and replace the existing multiple treaties into
a coherent, readable, set of rules, he added.

"The forensic truth is, however, that EU
law has always had primacy over member states' law and the UK signed up for that
when joining the community in 1973.

"The use of the euro will continue to be
entirely a matter for individual member states to decide," he explained.

"And - far from intensifying centralisation - the draft Treaty reinforces
member states' powers, provides for extra involvement by national parliaments in
the legislative process, and does not add to the powers of the Commission at
all."

Mr Kinnock also acknowledged that, while he did not believe a referendum on the Treaty was constitutionally required, he was enthusiastic about
the further discussion of the subject which the prospect of a referendum would create.

"The reason is not that I am a campaign addict or a Euroanorak is that our country has been inundated by myths and downright lies," he said.

"People have been wilfully misled and the interests and influence of the UK have consequently been
arrested," he went on.

"The referendum campaign will at least provide the opportunity
for the fictions to be fought and beaten with the facts."